Charles Neufeld - A prisoner of the Khaleefa (Twelve years captivity at Omdurman)

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Charles Neufeld - A prisoner of the Khaleefa (Twelve years captivity at Omdurman)

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J\ Prisoner

Rbakcf a Cu)e]\)c

at

.

years* Captiuitj)

Omdurman.



Charles Heufeld.





I

A I'RISOXER OF

Till'

KlIALEEFA

NEUFELD IN CAPTIVITY.

A PRISONER OF •

uwclvc







THE KHALEEFA

L?carc>' Captivit\> at

Qlu^unnan

BY

CHARLES NEUFELD

WITH NUMEROUS rORTRAITS AND PLANS

SECOND EDITION

LONDON: CHAPMAN & HALL, 1899

ld.

^' ((

\ \i^^

.c

X!.V\^

PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,

LONDON AND BECCLES.

[ol

/2

i^

BcMcatiou

TO

PUBLIC OPINION CHARLES NEUFELD



CONTENTS INTRODUCTION PAGES

The calumnies journey

of critics— My female slave

— Preliminary

arrangements

— Real

— General

object of

my

Stephenson's 1-7

letter

CHAPTER I

1

START FOR KORDOFAN

— A neglected warning— Hasseena accom— Dervishes reported on the road — Non-

Eng'^genicnt of guides panies

the

arrival of

party

Hogal

— Dervishes sighted at Selima Wells CHAPTER

.

.

8-14

II

r.KTRAVED BY GUIDES

—A quarrel amongst the guides — Hassan convicted of error— Zigzagging in the desert — A council of war — Surprised by the dervishes — The 15-28 fight — Taken prisoners

Different routes over the desert

Scouts sent out

CHAPTER IN

111

THE HANDS OF THE DERVISHES

Conference of the Emirs Farag and

Baggage looted by

der\-ishes

for the Beit-el-Mal

Hamza— Halt

for the

— The Emirs confiscate

all

nighttreasure

— Cross-questioned on my letters— Called

....

a

Government spy— Tortured by dervish guards— Rescued by 29-40 Hamza and reserved for Wad en Nejoumi

CONTENTS

viii

CHAPTER

IV

ARRIVAL IN DONGOLA l-ACES

Display of dervish horsemanship— Flogging among the Ansar— Hasseena is searched Insults of the rabble— I am brought Evidence of a before Nejoumi— I declare myself a merchant Execution of fourteen Arabs Christian girl-convert against me 4^-5I am re-examined and sent to the Khalccfa of the party









.

CHAPTER V THE REAL HISTORY OF THE CAPTURE Extracts from newspaper and the guide

official

Gabon- Dissensions

accounts

in the

—The antecedents of

Kabbabish tribe— Gabou



for his own section Hassan's part in the matter Gabou reveals the plot to Nejoumi and enlists Hogal on his side The Emirs prepare to intercept me Capture of the caravan Hogal's deceit and its excuse 53-63

schemes



— ....



CHAPTER

VI

DONGOLA TO OMDURMAN Preparations for the journey

Government— His

loss

— Nejoumi's friendly disposition of faith in the Mahdist

to the

movement

Why the guide Amin was executed— Horrible death of an old woman— In the market-place of Omdurman — First meet-

Arab



with Slatin I am chained and tortured— I defy the Khaleefa— A mock execution— The Khaleefa is merciful— Slatin intervenes— Letter to Mankarious Effendi— Imprisoned by ing

Slatin's advice

64-79

CHAPTER

VII

THROWN INTO PRISON Methods of shackling— My the head-gaoler's

first

night in prison— Hasseena sent to

hareem— Mahmoud Wad Said— Ajjab Abou sons of Awad el Kerim— Sheikh Hamad El

Jinn—The three Nil—Ahmed Abdel Maajid and his bride— Lessons in Mahdieh —I visit Khartoum in chains—Again before the Khaleefa— chains removed

My

80-92

—A

CONTENTS CHAPTER

ix

VIII

PRISON LIFE from

— Possibilities of escape— News Egypt— Idris-es-Saier — His methods of extortion —

prison

homily— Effectual blackmail

rrayers— Night

in the

PAGES

Abou Hagar

93-104

CHAPTER

IX

MY FIRST CHANCE OF ESCAPE cd Din — His relations with Gabou — We plan an — Death of Nur ed Din — My sickness and recovery Treatment of typhus — decline to be converted — Meal-time the Saier — Father Ohrwalder's charity — A famine — The struggle food — Ministrations of Hasseena — Mutual help

Ahmed Nur escape

in

I

for

amongst the prisoners

105-119

CHAPTER X PRISON JUSTICE the



gaolers

amongst

I

women



— Tactics of — Discipline flogging— The gaoler

The advantages of matrimony become doctor to the harecms

Escapes from the Saier

prisoners



dismissed Method mental agony

of

— My

flogging

first



I

am

flogged again

— My

120-133

CHAPTER

XI

A SERIOUS DILEMMA

— Hasseena's condition — A disputed paternity — Mohammedan laws of marriage and divorce— decide to claim the child — Idris disputes the claim — A jury of matrons decides in my favour— Birth of Makkieh — The Khaleefa's congratulations — Joseppi, the German baker 134-144

Newspaper calumnies

I

"

*'

.

CHAPTER IBRAHIM Friendship with

Wad

Adlan

The Khaleefa grows

.

.

XII

WAD ADLAN

— His directorship of the Beit-el-Mal —Adlan thrown into prison—The

jealous

CONTENTS FACES

design the Mahdi s advantages of trading-Adlan reinstated-I guide Moussa Effendi-The Mankarious to

tomb-Letters

Kanaga-Reports from Egypt-Escape of Adlan Treachery of spies— Disgrace and death

Daoud

el

CHAPTER Letters

Joseppi-

of .

.

I45-I59

XIII

THE TRUE HISTORY OF MY ATTEMPT TO ESCAPE Mankarious— of the German Consul and my manager to

Kanaga's visit to Cairo— He receives a letter to Slatin— He is captured at Berber and turns back— The War Office letter to 160-169 my wife My answer to calumnies



CHAPTER XIV A PRISONER AT LARGE Belief in evil spirits

— Shwybo as an alchemist— He

flogged for his

is

make saltpetre— Released from my

fetters pains— I am —The gunpowder factory at Halfey eh— Death of Makkieh— am transferred to Khartoum — Our gunpowder a deliberate

told to

failure

—Visits of Father Ohrwalder— News of his escape

.

170-184

CHAPTER XV DIVORCED AND MARkIED



Hasseena's thievish propensities I The Khaleefa finds me a wife

Umm further

am



I

compelled to divorce her forestall his

good

offices

— Mohammedan divorce and re-marriage — dilemma— The second child dies — Hasseena proves

es Shole

185-194

irreclaimable

CHAPTER XVI HOPE AND DESPAIR





Mankarious' first envoy returns Arrival of second envoy RossignoU's guide AbdaUah Projected method of escape Abdallah's





— Slatin escapes — My chains redoubled — Slatin's reputation amongst the Mahdists— His read to the MusUmanieh — Confiscation of his wives and property — My deliverer returns— am again in treatment of Rossignoli

— The

Khaleefa's

fury

letter

I

the Saier

195-208

II

CONTENTS CHAPTER A

Nahoum Abbajee

encjages

factory state of the

XVII

r

NEW OCCUPATION

PAGES

me— Emptiness of the treasury— Unsatis-

currency— I

design blocks for the Khaleefa's buried treasure

I

xi

am

transferred to the arsenal—

Mint— We do

great

damage— The 209-215

CHAPTER

XVIII

MY SECOND IMPRISONMENT Idris a reformed first

my kind treatment— Fauzi's Ahmed's captivity— His death by

character— He ensures

night in prison— Kadi

Europe— My

siarvatron— Death of Wad Zarah— Letters from replies— My reflections in prison

216-225

CHAPTER XIX RUMOURS OF RELIEF work in the arsenalKhartoum again-Thoughts of Gordon-At The troops experiments— Chemical metals— Extracting precious defects—

advancing— I invent a powder-mill— Its manifold of metal— Repairscheme to gain time-Wholesale destruction 226-241 fever for news In a Onoor— to letter steamer— My ing a .

CHAPTER XX In

PREPARING TO RECEIVE THE GUNBOATS to the English— Anxiety the Saier as a visitor— I send inteUigence The Khaleefa's Abyssinia— from circle-Embassy my amongst reply— Mahmoud

disobeys

orders— Defeat

Osman and

of

dechne

Mahmoud at the Atbara— Manufacture of torpedoes— I The torpedoes explode— to assist— My chains redoubled— sympathizers— Frustrating Government for become a centre the mines

..•••••

.

242-256

CHAPTER XXI NEARING THE END rumours-Appeals to prophecy-I suggest a night attack with a —I send more information to the army— Mad struggle outsallies Khaleefa Idris-The gaoler-Negotiations with of fugitives-The The gunboats open fire-I go mad-Arrival

Conflicting

riderless

horse—The Khaleefa's despair

.

.

-257

20«

CONTENTS

xii

CHAPTER XXII AT LAST



PACKS



Threats of the prisoners The routed army in flight Macdonald's brigade Illuminating the Ratib Soudanese sang-froid Sheikh ed Din repulsed Attack upon Macdonald Destruction of Yacoub Flight of the Khaleefa His narrow escape from















— We meet —The — My German tongue

The Sirdar enters the prison head-quarters' mess Mr. Bennet Burleigh forsakes me

the Sirdar



CHAPTER

269-280

XXIII

THE SIRDAR AND SAVAGE WARFARE The

looting of

Omdurman — Soudanese

—A

troops to the rescue



— Genial

war correspondent's article The Sirdar errs in giving quarter Lex talionis The ferocity of wounded dervishes horseplay





—No succour desirable— A challenge to correspondents

.

2S1-28S

CHAPTER XXIV BACK TO CIVILIZATION High hopes— Disillusionment— Attitude of the War Office— I am forced to defend myself— Newspaper calumnies The News Agency representative A good Samaritan Sir George Newnes 289-299

— —



CHAPTER XXV HOW GORDON DIED Conflicting

accounts— A hero's death— Hope deferred— Gordon's



night Value of my testimony— Father Ohrwalder's evidence— " Ten Years' Captivity" criticized—Justification of Gordon— The trader as missionary— A tribute to Gordon 300-324

last

.

APPENDICES Appendix

I.

II.

„ »

III.

»

IV.

»

V.

j>

VI.

Hassan Bey Hassanein

325-331 332-337

Orphali Letter dictated by the Khaleefa to General

Stephenson Ibrahim Pasha

-,-g_--Q

Fauzi— Gordon's

favourite

officer

340-345 346-348

Ahmed Youssef Kandeel The Soudan

:

its

Past, Present,

and Future

.

349-359

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 1.

Neufeld

2.

Ax Arab Guide

TO FACE PACK Frontispiece

in Captivity

8

4.

The Khaleefa's Eunuchs at Attention The Khaleefa's Tender Mercies

5.

Sheikh ed Din's Eunuch

3.



in his Master's

.

.

>

yj 45

Marriage-

Jibbeh

64

6.

Writing under Difficulties

77

7.

A Group

84

8.

Learning the Mahdi's Ratih

9.

of Prisoners

94

1dris-es-Saier

103

10.

Catarina

11.

A Flogging

12.

Meal-time

13.

Moussa Daoud el Kanaca

154

114

dy in

Order of the Khaleefa

.

.

.129

the Saier

143

14.

Mankarious Effendi with Guides

164

15.

Umm

189

16.

Said Bey Gumaa

203

17-

Fauzi Pasha in Dervish Dress

218

18.

Neufeld's

es

Shole and two Children

Hut in the

Saier, showing

19.

Onoor

20.

Powder-machines

21.

A Group— from Photograph taken Neufeld doubly fettered

223

226

Issa

Beiram, 1899 22.

the F'AMOUS Anvil

236

at the Feast of 242

252

XIV

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS TO FACE PACE

23.

Shereef, the "False Fourth Khaleefa"

24.

The Flag of Khaleefa Shereef

25.

Trophies taken at

263

Omdurman

26.

Khaleel Agha Orphali

27.

Hassan Bey Hassanein

28.

Fauzi Pasha in Uniform

29.

Ahmed Youssef Kaxdeel

282

303

.

340

.

346

Map showing Proposed Route and Routk actually taken by Caravan Sketch accompanying Author's Account of Capture Plans of Palace at Death of Gordon

Khartoum

illustrating

23

the 334

THE KHALEEFA

A PRISONER OF

INTRODUCTION Within seventy-two hours the Soudan, I commenced

of

my

arrival In Cairo

to dictate

my

from

experiences

volume, and had dictated them from Egypt, in 1S87, until I had reached the

for the present

the time

I

left

incidents connected with

my

arrival at

Omdurman

as

the Khaleefa's captive, when I became the recipient of a veritable sheaf of press-cuttings, extracts, letters, private

and

official,

added Eg>'pt, on October

still

further

My

first

and when

new and to

old,

on the

which collection was

arrival of

my

wife In

13.

feelings after reading the bulk of these, the sensation of walking about free and

unshackled had worn off a little, was that I had but escaped the savage barbarism of the Soudan to of the refined cruelty of civilization. maybe, my rapid change from chains

become the victim Fortunately,

and starvation allow myself table ill

in

freedom and the luxuries I might indulge In, brought about Its Inevi-

to

to

While when the delirium of fever had left

result— a reaction, and then collapse.

bed

I

could,

B

A PRISONER OF THE KHALEEFA

2

was no longer struggling for breath and standing room in that Black Hole of Omdurman, the Saier, find it in my heart to forgive my critics, and say, " I might have said the same of them, had they been in my place and I in theirs." But the inaccuracies written and published in respect to my nationality, biography, and, above all, the astounding inaccuracies published in connection with my capture and the circumstances attending it, necessitate my offering a few words to my readers by way of introduction but I shall be as brief and concise as possible. I have, both directly and indirectly, been blamed for, or accused of, the loss of arms, ammunition, and monies sent by the Government to the loyal Sheikh of the Kabbabish, Saleh Bey Wad Salem. Some have gone so far as to accuse me of betraying the party I accompanied into the hands of the dervishes a betrayal which led eventually to the virtual extermination of the tribe and the death of its brave chief. The betrayal of the caravan I accompanied did lead to this result it also led me into chains and slavery. According to one account, I arrived at Omdurman on the I St or 7th of March (both dates are given in the same book), 18S7; yet, at this time, to the best me, and

I

;

;

of

my

General commanding the Army Egypt, General Stephenson, was

recollection, the

of Occupation

in

trying in Cairo to persuade

jected

journey into

me

Kordofan.

publication, in the preface to their

readers

to

point

to

abandon In

my

a very

pro-

recent

which the authors ask

out any

inaccuracies,

credited with arriving as a captive at

I

Omdurman

am in

INTRODUCTION 1SS5,

3

when at this time I was attached as Interpreter Gordon ReHef Expedition, and stood within

to the

a few yards of General Earle at the battle of Kirbekan

when he was

killed.

It

is

man he ever spoke to. The guide and spy who

probable reported

was the

I

my

last

capture and

death on the 13th or 14th of April, 1887, only reported

what he thought had actually happened, as a possible while the result of arrangements he had made ;

refugee

Wakih

Idris,

who

reported In August, 1890,

was conducting a large drapery establishment in Omdurman, must have been a Soudanese humorist, and, doubtless, hugely amused at his tale being believed in the face of the Mahdi's and Khaleefa's crusade against finery and luxuries (although the tenets may have stopped short at the entrance to their hareems), and when every one, from the highest to the lowest, had to wear the roughest and commonest of woven that

I

A

material.

drapery establishment

is

generally asso-

ciated with fine clothing, silks, ribbons,

Omdurman, such an

establishment,

if

and

laces

;

in

opened, would

have been consigned to the flames, or the Beit el Mai, and its proprietor to the Saier (prison). Yet again, when I am more heavily weighted with chains,

and

my

gaoler, to evidence his detestation of

the Kaffir (unbeliever) entrusted to his charge, goes

out of his lash,

I

way

am

to invent

an excuse

for giving

reported as being at liberty,

my

me

the

release

having been granted on the representations of some imaginary Emir, who claimed it on the ground that I had arranged the betrayal of Sheikh Saleh's caravan.

A PRISONER OF THE KHALEEFA

4

There

Is

one subject

which has made

the

I

life

must touch upon, a subject

my

of

wife

as

much

of

a hell upon earth during my captivity, as that captivity was to me and a subject which has caused the most I refer poignant grief and pain to my near relatives. ;

The Abyssinian female servant Hasseena. the caravan opened up mere fact of her accompanying a quarry for quidnuncs to delve in, and they delved to

my

for

twelve long years.

the subject here

It is

suffice

;

it

needless to dilate upon to say that

if,

when my

have read through my plain narrative, they have conscience enough left to admit to themselves that they have more injured a woman than the helpless, and in this particular connection, ignorant captive, who has returned to life to confront them, and if they try in future to be as charitable to their own flesh and blood as some of the savage fanatics were to me in the Soudan, I shall rest content. My narrative, and here I wish to say that it is critics

presented as

I

dictated

first

it,

notwithstanding

my

was put to me, " contra" dictions based upon official and semi-official records and reports, may be depended upon as being as being confronted with, as

correct a record as

of the events of

it

memory can be expected

my

to give

twelve years' existence, from All

Fools' Day, 1887, when, in spite of all warnings,

away from

At

the

life

and

civilization to

beginning of

1887,

I rode barbarism and slavery.

Hogal

Dufa'allah, a

brother of Elias Pasha, a former Governor of Kordofan,

came to me at Assouan and suggested my accompanying him to Kordofan, where large quantities of gum

;

INTR OD UCTION

5

were lying awaiting a favourable opportunity to be brought down, he possessing a thousand cantars (cwts.). The owners of the gum were afraid to bring it to the Egyptian frontier, believing that the Government would confiscate it. Hogal was of opinion that if I accompanied him, we should be able to induce the people to organize a series of caravans for the transport of the gum, he and

I

signing contracts to buy

it on arrival at Wadi Haifa, and guaranteeing the owners against confiscation by the Government. Letters and messages, he said, would be of no avail the people would believe they were traps set for thcni by the Government, and it was out of the question for us to attempt to take with us the large amount of money required to purchase the gum on the spot. I being looked upon as an Englishman, and an Englishman's word being then considered as good as his bond, Hogal was sure of a successful journey so it was finally agreed that Hogal and I should make up a small caravan, and get away as early as possible. ;

At this time, February, 1887, the loyal sheikh, Saleh Bey Wad Salem, of the Kabbabish tribe, was holding his own against the Mahdists, and had succeeded keeping open the caravan routes of the Western Soudan. in

Hogal and

I

came

to Cairo to

make

various busi-

and while here I called upon General Stephenson and Colonel Ardagh, and asked permission to proceed. They tried to persuade me to abandon what appeared to them a very risky expedition but, telling them that I was bent upon ness arrangements,

;

A PRISONER OF THE KIIALEEFA

6

undertaking

it,

permission or not,

I

was asked if I to Sheikh Saleh,

would mind delivering some letters as a visit to him was necessary to procure guides for I was also to inform the later stages of the journey. him verbally that his request for arms and ammuthat he should send men at nition had been granted and that a once to Wadi Haifa to receive them number of messages to this effect had already been General Stephenson evidently gave the sent him. matter further consideration, for, on calHng for the He said he forthcoming. letters, they were not ;

;

would write to me to Assouan but, he continued, he would be glad if I would encourage Saleh, or any of the loyal sheikhs I met, to continue to harass the dervishes, and let him have what information I could on my return respecting the country and the ;

people.

The

precise circumstances under which

I

received

have forgotten, but my former business manager tells me that, one evening at Assouan, he found lying on the desk an official envelope, unaddressed, opened it, and was still reading the letter it contained when I walked in, and exhibited This was the great annoyance at his having seen it. letter from General Stephenson to me, referred to by Slatin and Ohrwalder. I remember it but as a sort of private communication, not in any way official and I think it well at an early moment to state so, as it has been borne in upon me that there is an impression in certain quarters that I might, on the strength of references made to it in Father Ohrwalder's and Slatin

his letter

I

;

INTRODUCTION Pasha's books,

make some

Government, and

I

7

claim against the British

consider

it

advisable to say at

once that no such idea ever occurred to me. Completing our arrangements in Cairo, Hogal and I

started south,

for the

Hogal going

Derawi to buy camels I going to Assouan make final arraniiements and to

journey to Kordofan, and

and Wadi

Haifa to

prepare food for the desert journey.

CHAPTER I

I

START FOR KORDOFAN

Before leaving Assouan for Cairo, I had made an agreement with Hassibel Gabon, of the Dar Hamad section of the Kabbabish tribe, and Ali el Amin, fromWadi el Kab, to act as guides for us as far as Gebel Ain, where we hoped to find Sheikh Saleh. Gabou was in the employ of the military authorities as spy, receiving a monthly gratuity or pay. He and Ali el Amin were each to receive three hundred dollars for the journey, a hundred and fifty dollars each to be paid in advance, and the remainder at the end of the journey. On arrival at Gebel Ain, they were to arrange for guides for us from amongst Saleh's men. The route we had chosen is shown on the accompanying plan, taken from a map published by Kauffmann, a copy of which I had with me, and another copy of which I have been fortunate enough to find since my return. On arriving at Derawi, Hogal set about at once buying camels. Our party was to consist of Hogal, Hassib el Gabou, Ali el Amin, my Arabic clerk Ellas, my female servant Hasseena, myself, and four men whom Hogal was to engage, to bring up our party to

AN ARAB GUIDE.

/

STAMT FOR KORDOFAN

9

we might be prepared to deal with any small band of marauding dervishes. Hogal was to purchase camels from the Ababdeh, who possessed, and probably still do, the best camels for the description of journey we were undertaking. He was to take them into the desert to test their powers of endurance, as, from the route chosen, they might have to travel fifteen days without water. He was also to purchase ten people, so that

extra camels to carry water, so that arose,

we

if

the necessity

could strike further west into the desert than

and be able to keep away from the wells for thirty days. We were to take with us only such articles as were essential for the journey food, arms and ammunition, three hundred dollars in cash, and our presents of watches, silks, jewellery, pipes, and arranged

for,

;

ornaments

for the sheikhs

we

met.

Hogal was to leave Derawi on or about the 20th March, and bringing the camels through the desert on the west of the Nile, was so to time his last stage as

Wadi Haifa

on the 26th or 27th. and myself were to slip over by boat, and our caravan was to strike off west at once. Our departure was to be kept as secret as to reach

The

guides,

my

at sunset

clerk, servant,

possible.

On my

reaching Shellal

after

leaving

Hogal

at

Mohammad

Derawi, I was overtaken by an old friend, Abdel Gader Gemmareeyeh, who, having learned in confidence from Hogal the reason for his purchasing the camels, hurried after me to warn me against employing Gabon as guide, as he knew the man was not to be trusted. He told me that Gabon was acting

A PRISONER OF THE KHALEEFA

lo

as spy for friend and foe,

but this

I

and was being paid by both,

did not then credit.

I

laughed at the man's

him that as Hogal and I expressed fears, were to direct the caravan, and Gabou was to accompany us as guide, I had no intention of abandoning and

telling

a journey, at the end of which a small fortune awaited me. I knew very well that not a single person was to be trusted out of sight and hearing, but as there was

no reason why Gabou should not be kept within both, there was equally no reason why I should have any Besides this, I was vain enough to believe that fears. perhaps

I

might, as a result of

my

journey, be able

hand to the military authorities a report of some and the halo of romance, which still hung over everything Soudanese, was in itself no little attraction. I reached Wadi Haifa about March 23, and set to work quietly with final arrangements. Hasseena had elected to accompany us, and this on the sugto

value,

gestion of Hogal, his reasons being

first, that being accompanied by a woman, the peaceful intentions of our little caravan would be evidenced secondly, ;

that Hasseena,

when

the slave of her old master of

the Alighat Arabs, had on a

number of occasions made

the journey between El Obeid, Dongola, and Derawi,

and would be of great use to us in hareems in very much the same way that a lady in civilized countries, having an entrde to a salon, is occasionally able to further the interests of her

and

in

the

East,

all

male relatives or friends

women have

the

entrie

to

hareems.

The morning

after

my

arrival

at

Wadi Haifa

I

/

START FOR KORDOFAN

ii

heard that forty of Sheikh Saleh's men, led by one of his slaves, Ismail, had already arrived to take over the

arms and ammunition. Gabon came to me the same day, and suggested our abandoning the proposed expedition, as he was afraid that the dervishes might hear of Saleh's men coming in, and send out bands to intercept the caravan on its return, and we might fall into the hands of one of them. BeHeving that Gabou was simply trying to induce me to add to his remuneration for the extra risks, I told him I should hold him to his agreement. A day or two later, seeing that I was determined to go on, he suggested that we should, for safety,

accompany Saleh's men, but

this

I

objected

to.

The Kabbabish were

fighting the dervishes, and lost no opportunity of pouncing down upon any small bands, and I had no particular wish to look for more

my expedition itself was likely to proThere was also the question of time Sheikh Saleh's baggage camels would only move at the rate of about a mile an hour, while ours would cover two and adventures than

vide.

;

a half to three miles easily.

On March

24,

I

received a telegram from Hogal,

then at Assouan, announcing his arrival there with the camels, and

his intention

to

come on

at once,

Wadi Haifa on the Gabou now exhibited

so that he should have reached

28th or 29th of the month. particular anxiety that

and took upon himself them.

On my

we should join Saleh's party, to make an arrangement with

remonstrating with him, he said that

if

the dervishes were on the road, they would certainly be

met with between Wadi Haifa and the Selima Wells,

A PRISONER OF THE KHALEEFA

12

maybe, at the wells themselves, and this was the only part of our route where there was any likelihood of our coming in contact with them, our road, after

or,

" Now," said he, " if Selima, being well to the west. Saleh's caravan goes off, and the dervishes on the road

are not strong enough to attack, they will allow the caravan to pass, but wait about the roads either in the

hope of getting reinforcements in time to attack, or He with the hope of attacking any smaller parties." believed the dervishes might go on to the wells, and

encamp

there, so that in either case

we should

fall

into

was Gabon's opinion that Sheikh Saleh's caravan was strong enough to annihilate the dervish bands, which he now said he had heard were This decided me. I asked him actually on the road. why he had not told me of this before. He had for-

their clutches.

It

gotten to do so

The and

and 31st of the month passed, no appearance of Hogal and the camels.

28th, 29th, 30th,

still

was impatient to be off, and Gabou suggested, that as my camels must be close at hand, Hasseena, Elias, El Amin and I should start with Saleh's Ismail

caravan, he following us as soon as our camels arrived.

My

camels being in good condition, and unloaded,

would, he said, overtake the caravan in a few hours,

and he was very anxious

them for were joined

to test

We

trotting

speed while overtaking us. at Wadi Haifa by about twenty Arabs of different tribes, bringing our caravan up to sixty-four men and about a hundred and sixty camels. Gabou gave us as guide for Selima, a

man named Hassan,

also of the

/

Dar Hamads.

START FOR KORDOFAN

Crossing to the western bank of the

Nile early on the morning of April

we had loaded up and

o'clock

13

the Soudan, which

was

i,

18S7, by ten

started on that journey to

to take

me

twelve long years

to complete.

When we

had been two days on the road, I began to feel a little uneasy at the non-appearance of my camels but thinking that maybe Gabon had purposely delayed starting so as to give them a stiff test in hard trotting, I comforted myself with this reflection, though as day after day passed, my anxiety became very real. On the night of April 7, we judged we must be close to Selima Wells, and sent out scouts to they reached the wells, and returned reconnoitre saying that they could not fmd traces of any one havinor been there for some time. Our caravan reached the wells between nine and ten o'clock in the morning, and about midday, while we were occupied in watering the camels and preparing food, we heard a shot fired from the south-east, and shortly afterwards one of our scouts came in saying that he had been sighted by a party of about twenty men on camels one of the men had fired at him at long range, and the whole party had then hurried off to the south. A hurried conference was held it was the general opinion that this party must be scouts of a larger one, and that they had gone off for the purpose of apprising Ismail decided upon pushing on at their main body. once. There was little time for me to consider what to do to return to Wadi Haifa was out of the question, as Ismail could not spare any of his men as a ;

;

;

;

;

PRISONER OF THE KHALEEFA

14

was not to be thought bodyguard to wait at the wells alternative was to go on with of and the only other ;

the caravan.

I

short notes for told Elias to write out which I had Intended to leave at

Hogal and Gabon,

should have to but as Ismail pointed out, I marked m some way to leave them conspicuously dervishes got to the wells attract attention, and. If the had seen returned with others, they first or if those we notes, which would would be the first to get the party I was so endanger our caravan, and the little There was nothing for it but to anxiously expecting. worst came to the go on and hope for the best. I f the meant only that my gum expedition was the wells

worst,

;

It

after reachmg temporarily delayed, and that I should, of getting Sheikh Saleh, take my first opportunity

north again.

To face page

15.

CHAPTER

II

BETRAYED BY GUIDES

There Wells

are five caravan routes running from Selima

— that

furthest west leading to El Kiyeh, the

next to El Agia, and the one in the centre leading to the Nile near Hannak, with a branch running to Wadi

Kab. Our objective being to meet Sheikh Saleh at Gebel Ain, we should have taken the route leading to El Agia, and this we had selected, because, as it was well out in the desert, there was little likelihood of our encountering any roving bands of dervish robbers. When we had been on the road a few hours, I ventured the opinion that we had taken the wrong route, and a halt was called while I examined the map I had wnth me, after which examination I felt certain The that we were marching in the wrong direction. guide Hassan was equally certain that we were on the El Agia road. A discussion ensued, which was ended by Hassan telling me, with what he intended to be withering sarcasm, " I never walked on paper" (meaning the map) " I have always walked on the desert. I am the guide, and I am responsible. The road you want us to go by leads to El Etroun (Natron district), el

;

A PRISONER OF THE KHALEEFA

i6

sixty marches distant

if

;

we

take your road and

all die of thirst in the desert,

I

should be held

we re-

sponsible for the loss of the lives, and your paper

Hassan's dramatic

could not speak to defend me."

description of the scene of his being blamed by the

Prophet a

*'

for losing these valuable lives

had more

paper,"

to

do with

If

he trusted to

his gaining his point

than pure conviction as to whether we were on the From El Agia, as Saleh's men right road or not. said,

they

knew every

stone on the desert, but in this

part they had to trust to Hassan.

During the whole of this first day we forced the baggage camels on at their best pace, travelling by my compass in a south and south-easterly direction. The arrangement I had made with Gabou for my own caravan, which arrangement Ismail had agreed to

when Gabou suggested our

was that we should the El Agia camel them.

When we

travelling with

travel a

but keep

tracks,

halted that night

west of

to the

little

I

them,

parallel

spoke

to

to Ismail

and asked him to keep to this part of the agreement that is to say, to travel parallel to, and not on, the track. Hassan objected, as it meant slower travelling. Still pressing on after a short rest, Hassan zigzagged the caravan over stony ground with about

this,



the object of losing our of about

We

1

trail,

as our caravan, consisting

60 camels, was an easy one to track up. mid-day of the loth, when

travelled fast until

we were

obliged

extreme heat. slightest sign

We

to

take

were

in

a

rest

owing

to

the

an arid waste not the anything living but

of vegetation or

;

BETRAYED BY GUIDES

Off again at sunset,

ourselves to be seen anywhere.

we

travelled the whole night through,

me

midnight showing

we

that

17

my

were,

compass

If

at

anything,

when our direction should have been south-west. At our next halt I

travelling towards the east, certainly

spoke to Ismail again, but Hassan convinced him of The following mornhis infallibility In desert routes. disguising the fact about ing, the nth, there was no our direction at night-time,

between

when I

I

:

the regular guides travel by the stars

but they laugh at the

the cardinal points, as

tried to eet

him

little

niceties

Hassan laughed

at

me

to believe in the sand dlao^ram

showed him, with the object of proving

to

him that

a divergence Increases the further you get away from the starting-point. that he

thought

El

Amin now joined me

we were on

Hassan was prepared.

He

the

wrong

In

saying

road, but

had, he said, during the

night, led us further Into the

desert to again break

and that he was now leading us to the El Amin replied that it was his opinion that Hassan had lost the road in the night, and now was trying to find it. This led to a lively discussion and an exchange of compliments, which almost ended In a nasty scuffle, as some were siding with Hassan and others with El Amin. Acting upon my advice, men were sent out east and west to pick up the regular caravan route. Hassan declared that a branch of the regular road would be found to the east, Amin and I declared for the west. Hassan took two men east, and Amin, accompanied by two others, went west. About an hour after sunset our

trail,

regular

road.

c

A PRISONER OF THE KHALEEFA

i8

El Amin arrived first, and both parties returned. trace of the reported that they had failed to find any

Hassan came shortly afterwards, and, having

road.

the heard before reaching Ismail of the failure of triumphant, as a others, came up to us jubilant and road had been picked up where he said it would. not only picked up the road, but had come twenty to the resting-place of a caravan of fifteen to camels, which could only be a few hours ahead of us,

They had

embers of the caravan's fire places were still hot. I judged it best to be silent on the subject of the route now, though Amin, jibed and scoffed at by the

as the

was loud in his declarations that we were on the wrong route, and that Hassan had lost this nearly led to trouble again between him his way and the two men who had accompanied Hassan, as they considered their word doubted. We travelled east during the night, and crossed the

victorious Hassan,

;

road which Hassan had, during the day, picked up. But there was a feeling of uncertainty and unrest in the caravan. I

One

after

another appealed to me, and

I was still convinced my "paper" El Amin, pricked to Hassan wrong. and

could but say that

was

right

the quick, spread through the caravan his that

Hassan had not lost wrong

leading us in the

his

opinion

way, but was deliberately

direction.

When we

halted

on the 1 2th, Ismail, noticing the gossiping going on, and the manner of his men, decided upon sending out scouts to the east to see if they could pick up anything at all in the scouts,

way

of landmarks.

who were

absent

the

El

Amin

whole

joined the

day.

They

BETRAYED BY GUIDES returned at ni*Tht with the news that

19

wc were nearer

Agia Wells, and on this, our fourth day from Selima, we should have been close to El Agia. This report, coming not from El Amin only, but from the river than El

Saleh's

own people who knew

the

district,

created

Again the "paper" was called for, occasion Hassan was told that the paper

consternation.

and on

this

knew better than he did. That night scene of betrayed with death from thirst

men, desperate, or dervish swords a certaint}-,

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